
Experts warn summer vacationers of beach seashells so toxic they can 'kill in minutes'
Hiding inside some seashells could be a cone snail — a highly venomous sea snail that can sting people with a poisonous toxin.
People may unknowingly pick up the snail, which is found in coastal rockpools, after being attracted by its stunningly black-and-white patterned shell.
However, if the shell is still inhabited, the snail can harpoon a human with its deadly stinger — injecting a cocktail of toxins that can kill in minutes.
The snails can be found across the southern US coasts, but the types that can inject deadly venom have only been found near San Diego, California, and along Mexico 's Pacific coast.
Larger snails are more likely to deliver deadly stings, scientists say, while children are more at risk of death from stings due to their smaller size.
Some researchers fear the population of the snails, also found in the Indo-Pacific region, is now rising amid warming ocean temperatures.
Tina Petway, an associate curator of molluscs at Houston's Museum of Natural Sciences, Texas, is among the lucky few to survive a sting from the snails.
Petway was alone on a research trip to the Solomon Islands when she picked up a cone snail and, while turning to pick up another, it stung her three times.
She tried to pull the barbs from her skin but, finding she couldn't, she then tried to walk back to her hut — already feeling herself losing vision and consciousness.
Entering the hut moments later, she wrote a short note to her husband about what happened, took a lot of antihistamines - medications used during allergic reactions - and then climbed into bed.
It was three days before she finally woke up again, and realized that she had just survived the deadly snail attack.
'I realized this other hand was on fire,' she said on TikTok, describing the attack, 'so when I looked I could see where it had stung me three times'.
Afterward, she took a two-hour boat ride to the island's airstrip — and then waited there for three days for the next flight to get her off the island.
She says she is routinely plagued by headaches ever since suffering the sting, but has not suffered from any other long-term complications.
Australian marine snail specialist Dr Stephen Smith previously told ABC: 'It's one of the things that I've certainly instilled in my kids, that you don't pick up cone shells.
'Knowing what a cone shell looks like, the habitat you're likely to find them in… It's something we need to get out there so people are aware of the potential risk of this species.'
Cone snails are predators, armed with a deadly harpoon that they use to shoot fish and then inject toxins to immobilize them.
They do not hunt humans, but may deliver a sting if someone picks up their shell or accidentally steps on them in a rockpool or in the ocean.
There are no good estimates on the number of stings and fatalities caused by the snails in the US or among American vacationers every year, although it is thought to be low.
A 2016 study reviewing global data suggested there have been 139 cases of stings reported worldwide, of which 36 were fatal — based on information on cases they could find dating back to the 17th century.
It particularly focused on the conus geographus species — identified by its brown cone-shaped shell with white bands or white spots and known on Mexico's Pacific coast — which it said was behind half of all cases and fatalities.
'Children succumb more often to C. geographus stings than adults and stings by larger snails are lethal more often than stings from smaller snails, regardless of the victim's age,' the researchers said.
Also of concern is the conus textile — identified by a largely white cone-shaped shell covered with brown triangles — which can similarly deliver a nasty cocktail of neurotoxins in its stings.
In many cases, stings from the snails are mild and not dissimilar from one due to a wasp or a bee — causing pain in the area.
In some cases, however, this may progress to cyanosis — or blueness at the site due to decreased blood flow — and even numbness or tingling.
Doctors say that in severe cases, stings can cause numbness in an entire limb that progresses to a loss of sensation around the mouth and then the entire body.
Pictured above is the natural range for conus geographus, the most deadly cone snail
Paralysis can then occur, which also affects the lungs — stopping someone from being able to breath.
There is no antivenom for the stings, but doctors may treat them by immersing the affected area in water that is as hot as is tolerable — with the hot water potentially helping to denature the venom to make it less deadly.
Pressure may also be applied to the affected area, which can help to slow the spread of the poison in the body.
They may also inject a local anesthetic into the wounded area to try to ease the symptoms.
Patients are advised to stay calm and avoid any excessive movement.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Who should play Elon Musk in 'Artificial'? As Andrew Garfield is cast as Sam Altman, AI reveals the actors who could take on the role as the Tesla billionaire
It's one of the most eagerly anticipated movies in Hollywood, starring Andrew Garfield as the notorious OpenAI CEO, Sam Altman. But as hype around 'Artificial' builds, one key question remains – who is brave enough to take on the role of Elon Musk? Several names have already been floated, including comedic actor, Ike Barinholtz. However, it seems that AI – one of the key themes of the film – has other ideas. MailOnline asked ChatGPT which actors it thought would be able to tackle the role of the Tesla billionaire. According to the bot, the actor would need to 'pull off three things at once' – Musk's look, mannerisms, and energy. The leading contender for the role? Joseph Gordon–Levitt. 'Joseph Gordon–Levitt — adaptable, could nail the thoughtful–yet–offbeat vibe,' ChatGPT explained. MailOnline asked ChatGPT which actors it thought would be able to take on the role as the Tesla billionaire Artificial will be directed by Luca Guadagnino, and is loosely based on the drama behind the scenes at OpenAI. In 2023, Sam Altman was famously fired due to a loss of confidence from the board, before being rehired just five days later. Musk co–founded the company with Altman in 2015, but left in 2018 – and has been very vocal in his distain for his co–founder ever since. So far, several high–profile celebrities have been confirmed for the film, which is yet to have a release date. Andrew Garfield will star as Altman, while Monica Barbaro will play Mira Murati, the former Interim OpenAI CEO. Cooper Hoffman, Jason Schwartzman, Billie Lourd, and Chris O'Dowd also join the list, although their roles remain unclear. As for the part of Musk, ChatGPT explained that the actor will need to match the billionaire's look (tall, slightly angular face, intense eyes), mannerisms (mix of awkward pauses, blunt delivery, and bursts of enthusiasm), and energy (restless ambition, a bit of chaos, and occasional deadpan humor). Based on that rationale, the bot has put forward six potential actors. The AI bot has put forward six potential actors to play Elon Musk – including Nicholas Hoult and Cillian Murphy ChatGPT explained that the actor will need to match the billionaire's look (tall, slightly angular face, intense eyes), mannerisms (mix of awkward pauses, blunt delivery, and bursts of enthusiasm), and energy (restless ambition, a bit of chaos, and occasional deadpan humor) Alongside Joseph Gordon–Levitt, the AI bot suggests that Sherlock star, Benedict Cumberbatch, could have what it takes. He has 'proven range with eccentric geniuses, and could tweak his voice to match Musk's cadence,' ChatGPT explained. Oscar winner Rami Malek, who has previously played Freddie Mercury in Bohemian Rhapsody, is also a strong contender. He 'excels at portraying enigmatic, hyper–focused characters,' the bot explained. Skins star, Nicholas Hoult 'can do both awkward charm and intense ambition,' ChatGPT adds, while Oppenheimer's Cillian Murphy 'would bring a quieter, more calculating take on Musk'. Finally, ChatGPT has included a wild card – Adam Driver. 'If Hollywood wanted a slightly satirical version, Adam Driver could absolutely crush it,' the bot added. Elon Musk wants to push technology to its absolute limit, from space travel to self-driving cars — but he draws the line at artificial intelligence. The billionaire first shared his distaste for AI in 2014, calling it humanity's 'biggest existential threat' and comparing it to 'summoning the demon.' At the time, Musk also revealed he was investing in AI companies not to make money but to keep an eye on the technology in case it gets out of hand. His main fear is that in the wrong hands, if AI becomes advanced, it could overtake humans and spell the end of mankind, which is known as The Singularity. That concern is shared among many brilliant minds, including the late Stephen Hawking, who told the BBC in 2014: 'The development of full artificial intelligence could spell the end of the human race. 'It would take off on its own and redesign itself at an ever-increasing rate.' Despite his fear of AI, Musk has invested in the San Francisco-based AI group Vicarious, in DeepMind, which has since been acquired by Google, and OpenAI, creating the popular ChatGPT program that has taken the world by storm in recent months. During a 2016 interview, Musk noted that he and OpenAI created the company to 'have democratisation of AI technology to make it widely available.' Musk founded OpenAI with Sam Altman, the company's CEO, but in 2018 the billionaire attempted to take control of the start-up. His request was rejected, forcing him to quit OpenAI and move on with his other projects. In November, OpenAI launched ChatGPT, which became an instant success worldwide. The chatbot uses 'large language model' software to train itself by scouring a massive amount of text data so it can learn to generate eerily human-like text in response to a given prompt. ChatGPT is used to write research papers, books, news articles, emails and more. But while Altman is basking in its glory, Musk is attacking ChatGPT. He says the AI is 'woke' and deviates from OpenAI's original non-profit mission. 'OpenAI was created as an open source (which is why I named it 'Open' AI), non-profit company to serve as a counterweight to Google, but now it has become a closed source, maximum-profit company effectively controlled by Microsoft, Musk tweeted in February. The Singularity is making waves worldwide as artificial intelligence advances in ways only seen in science fiction - but what does it actually mean? In simple terms, it describes a hypothetical future where technology surpasses human intelligence and changes the path of our evolution. Experts have said that once AI reaches this point, it will be able to innovate much faster than humans. There are two ways the advancement could play out, with the first leading to humans and machines working together to create a world better suited for humanity. For example, humans could scan their consciousness and store it in a computer in which they will live forever. The second scenario is that AI becomes more powerful than humans, taking control and making humans its slaves - but if this is true, it is far off in the distant future. Researchers are now looking for signs of AI reaching The Singularity, such as the technology's ability to translate speech with the accuracy of a human and perform tasks faster. Former Google engineer Ray Kurzweil predicts it will be reached by 2045.


Daily Mail
5 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Scientists issue chilling warning about 'The Big One': Impending mega–earthquake on California's notorious San Andreas fault could be even BIGGER than we thought
It is predicted to be one of the most devastating earthquakes in history. And now scientists have issued a chilling warning about 'The Big One' – a mega–earthquake set to rock California 's notorious San Andreas fault. Experts from Caltech in Pasadena have studied a 7.7–magnitude earthquake that shook Myanmar in March along the Sagaing fault – a fault known for being eerily similar to San Andreas. That earthquake ended up rupturing a much longer section of the fault than scientists expected, killing thousands and causing widespread damage. According to the researchers, this suggests The Big One could also be even bigger than we originally thought. 'Future earthquakes might not simply repeat past known earthquakes,' said Jean–Philippe Avouac, co–author of the study. 'Successive ruptures of a given fault, even as simple as the Sagaing or the San Andreas faults, can be very different and can release even more than the deficit of slip since the last event. 'In addition, historical records are generally far too short for statistical models to represent the full range of possible earthquakes and eventual patterns in earthquake recurrence.' The devastating earthquake hit Myanmar on 28 March 2025, killing more than 2,000 people, and leaving 3,900 injured. The quake occurred when a section of the Sagaing fault ruptured, causing widespread damage along a swathe of territory down the middle of the country, including Sagaing, Mandalay, Magway and Bago regions and Shan State. In their new study, the Caltech team used satellite imagery of the Sagaing Fault's motion to understand exactly what happened – and whether a similar incident could happen in California. 'This earthquake turned out to be an ideal case to apply image correlation methods that were developed by our research group,' said Solène Antoine, first author of the study. 'They allow us to measure ground displacements at the fault, where the alternative method, radar interferometry, is blind due to phenomenon like decorrelation [a process to decouple signals] and limited sensitivity to north–south displacements.' Based on studies of previous tremors along the Sagaing fault, the researchers expected that the earthquake would occur on a 186–mile (300–kilometer) section of the fault, where no large earthquakes had occurred since 1839. The satellite images confirmed that this was the case – but that the fault actually slipped along a total of more than 310 miles (500km). In fact, the 310–mile section shifted by a whopping 9.8ft (three metres) after the quake. So, what does this mean for The Big One? Well, according to the researchers, it suggests The Big One won't look like anything we've seen before. Previous earthquakes on the San Andreas Fault include a 7.9–magnitude earthquake in 1857, which ruptured the fault from Monterey County all the way to Los Angeles County. Meanwhile, in 1906, an earthquake began just offshore of San Francisco, before rupturing in two directions, towards Humboldt County and Santa Cruz County. Instead, a future rupture could result in smaller, separate earthquakes. Or, it could be even bigger than those seen before – rupturing the fault all the way into San Bernardino, Riverside, and Imperial counties, and reaching a magnitude of 8. The researchers now hope to use their new models to better understand what The Big One will actually look like. 'Physics–based models provide an alternative approach with the advantage that they could, in principle, be tuned to observations and used for time–dependent forecast,' Professor Avouac added.


Daily Mail
16 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Why an ex-presidential candidate with a passion for illegal psychedelics thinks all Americans should experience hallucinations too
Former Texas Gov. Rick Perry has become an unexpected advocate for the illegal psychedelic drug ibogaine. The New York Times on Tuesday went on a trip with Perry, who twice ran for the White House and served as President Donald Trump 's Secretary of Energy during the Republican's first term. Perry recalled traveling to Tijuana, Mexico in September 2023 and spending 12 hours hallucinating that he was flying through space, seeing hieroglyphics and escaping the devil. 'I woke up very clearheaded, with this very warm feeling in my body,' Perry told the paper. 'I was as calm and as happy as I'd been in memory.' During his time serving as Texas governor, Perry knew that many veterans from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars were in trouble, but he first heard about ibogaine through a Navy SEAL he had hired in 2017 during his time running the Energy Department. The SEAL, Morgan Luttrell, told Perry he was taking time off to travel to Mexico to be treated with ibogaine after continuing to suffer from psychiatric issues post-deployment. Perry, a staunch conservative, told Luttrell - now a Republican U.S. congressman from Texas - to be careful. Cut to 2025 and Perry is convinced of its efficacy. 'It has literally given people their lives back,' he told The Times. In Perry's own case, after suffering from three severe concussions during his youth - and struggling with anxiety during his political career - the former Texas governor took an MRI before and after his ibogaine experience. Beforehand, his 73-year-old brain showed evidence of atrophy, not uncommon for someone of his age. Six months after his trip, in March 2024, the MRI showed the atrophy had vanished. 'You have the brain of a 40-year-old,' Dr. Charles Gordon, a Texas neurosurgeon and psychedelic skeptic, told Perry, The Times said. Since then, Perry has co-founded the nonprofit American for Ibogaine, as the drug remains a Schedule 1 drug in the United States under the 1970 Controlled Substances Act. He has called widening its use 'my life's mission,' he told the paper. He's found a sort-of across-the-aisle bedfellow in former Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, an Arizona Democrat turned independent, who left Congress earlier this year. Sinema told The Times that Perry was 'one of the few very conservative individuals in this space, with high credibility among what I'd call a nontraditional audience for psychedelic medicine.' Earlier this year, Perry successfully got Texas to put dollars into research on how ibogaine could help veterans. Sinema's Arizona became the second state to make that move. But at the national level, Perry still faces several hurdles. The Republican-led Congress already voted down Luttrell's amendment that would have allocated $10 million to the Pentagon to conduct clinical trials on ibogaine. Traditional conservatives also aren't on board. Family Research Council President Tony Perkins told The Times that while he hadn't done enough research to speak on ibogaine specifically, his conservative Christian organization has 'expressed opposition to the use of psychedelics because of longstanding spiritual, theological and ethical concerns about mind-altering drugs that open individuals up to mystical or transcendent experiences that are not in line with orthodox teaching of scripture.' And Perry still finds himself in the doghouse with Trump - as the president made clear recently when he brought up his former energy secretary's role in his first impeachment. Perry had set up the call between Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky - a call that House Democrats and a handful of Republicans said amounted to a solicitation of foreign interference in the 2020 election - with Trump asking Zelensky for dirt on Joe Biden and his son Hunter. 'I get indicted for making a phone call,' Trump complained at a meeting with faith leaders last month. 'I told the secretary, who wasn't the smartest bulb, he wasn't ... Rick Perry, you don't want him on your debate team, let me put it that way ... but he's the one that asked me to do it, Rick Perry.' 'And I said, "thanks Rick, that was a wonderful suggestion,"' Trump said.